The Skinny Confidential Him & Her Podcast - Relationship Expert Dr. Morgan Cutlip On Why 50% of Marriages End In Divorce, The Mental Load, & What All Moms Need To Know
Episode Date: March 20, 2025#820: Join us as we sit down with Dr. Morgan Cutlip – relationship expert & author, who shares actionable strategies for navigating mental load, marriage, & motherhood. From identifying burnout in r...elationships to prioritizing self-care & overcoming guilt tied to household responsibilities, Dr. Morgan offers a roadmap for balancing it all. In this episode, Dr. Morgan dives into modern gender dynamics, shifting relationship roles, the power of appreciation, & the nuances of effective communication.  To Watch the Show click HERE  For Detailed Show Notes visit TSCPODCAST.COM  To connect with Dr. Morgan Cutlip click HERE  To connect with Lauryn Bosstick click HERE  To connect with Michael Bosstick click HERE  Read More on The Skinny Confidential HERE  Get your burning questions featured on the show! Leave the Him & Her Show a voicemail at +1 (512) 537-7194.  This episode is brought to you by The Skinny Confidential  Head to the HIM & HER Show ShopMy page HERE and LTK page HERE to find all of Michael and Lauryn’s favorite products mentioned on their latest episodes.  To learn more about Dr. Morgan Cutlip and purchase her latest book, A Better Share, click HERE.  This episode is sponsored by The Skinny Confidential  Optimize your daily beauty routine. Shop The Skinny Confidential Mouth Tape at shoptheskinnyconfidential.com.  This episode is sponsored by Smart Mouth  Find SmartMouth at Walgreens, Walmart, Amazon or visit smartmouth.com/skinny to snag a special discount on your next SmartMouth purchase.  This episode is sponsored by NOBULL  Visit nobullproject.com/tsc for 30% off your entire order.  This episode is sponsored by Primal Kitchen  Head to primalkitchen.com/skinny to save 20% off your next online order with code SKINNY at checkout.  This episode is sponsored by Cymbiotika  Go to Cymbiotika.com/TSC for 20% off + free shipping.  This episode is sponsored by Skims  Check out SKIMS best intimates including the Fits Everybody Collection and more at skims.com/skinny #skimspartner  Produced by Dear Media
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The following podcast is a Dear Media production.
She's a lifestyle blogger extraordinaire.
Fantastic.
And he's a serial entrepreneur.
A very smart cookie.
And now Lauren Everts and Michael Bostic are bringing you along for the ride.
Get ready for some major realness.
Welcome to The Skinny Confidential, him and her.
Welcome back again to The Skinny Confidential Him and Her show.
Today we have a special guest, relationship expert and educator who's here to drop some
serious knowledge on us.
Dr. Morgan Cutlip, who specializes in helping couples navigate everything from the mental
load of parenting to improving communication, intimacy and overall mental wellbeing.
Today we'll be diving into why so many people feel lonely,
how your home environment might be affecting
your mental health, and how to have crucial conversations
that can take your relationships and sex life
to the next level.
Get ready for an insightful conversation
on how to redefine your relationship dynamics
and take back your power and love, intimacy and life.
Dr. Morgan, welcome to the show.
This is the Skinny Confidential, him and her.
Morgan, welcome to the show. This is the Skinny Confidential, him and her.
Something a lot of people I think don't even realize
is that they're burnt out.
Like they don't even know it's a burnout.
What do you think contributes to a burnout?
How do you even define it?
Burnout, burnout, so in motherhood
is like kind of where I specialize with burnout and
burnout often just sounds like the regular stuff we attribute to being a
mom. So forgetfulness, irritability, like inability to like track where stuff is.
You know, you like walk in a room you're like I don't even know why I'm in here
anymore. That is a major symptom of burnout. So familiar? Very familiar. I don't know where I've seen that before.
Well there's something to call it Michael, go ahead. Well there's usually three areas. So it's your cognitive, so almost like you lack some space in your brain to manage the stuff.
And then there's the emotional, which is like you cannot seem to manage your emotions because you don't have as much capacity to kind of
put toward regulation, things like that.
And then there's just the physical.
So your body, like women, I think something like 80% of autoimmune diseases exist in women.
A lot of our emotional state and our kind of mental well-being will come out in our
physical body.
And so a lot of times that's the other piece of burnout.
You'll feel it.
You'll be like, I just feel so burnt out.
It'll start showing up in your back.
It will start showing up in your gut, all these other areas.
So what do you tell people to do when they
hit all these three symptoms?
There's lots of places you can intervene.
But I talk about in my first book with moms,
and I teach moms, and it really applies to anybody anybody which is that you have to become a really good manager of yourself
because we tend to just go so hard into our motherhood, our work, all of these
things we pour into others. Women specifically are like really socialized
to sort of sacrifice themselves for the preservation of their relationships.
So you have to get good at being a self-manager, which you're like, you are the epitome of
being so good at this.
I listened to so many episodes and it's like you have your morning routine, you've got
your stuff.
But I encourage people, you got to do like a self-scan every single day.
What's going on with me?
What's going on with my physical self, my emotional, my mental?
And then you make little tweaks to kind of correct,
or you define it, you put a pin in it, come back to it later.
Like you take an inventory.
You take inventory. Yeah.
I think also too, as you get older, you start to be like,
okay, my energy thermometer is at 75% today. This is what's actually going to be
able to happen with that 75%. And the rest is like, it's gonna, I'm not gonna be able
to do it. And I'll give you an example, like some text messages that I have right now haven't
been returned for two months. And it's not that I'm like, going out of my way to not return them. I just, like you said, only have so much capacity in one day.
And, you know, my kids, my husband, my work, my family comes number one.
And then like, I can get to it when I can get to it.
Yeah.
And I know that it's not even a boundary and I'm not even trying to be mean.
No, it's just kind of boundary and I'm not even trying to be mean.
No, it's just kind of like an assessment of your capacity,
having some good self-awareness,
which most people actually don't have
that good of self-awareness,
so they don't check in on that stuff.
That's gonna be my book.
It's gonna be all about self-awareness.
I think it would be a great book.
Yeah, I think self-awareness is lacking in society.
Are you gonna do a chapter on yourself
and how you look at yourself in elevators and don't look at me?
No, I'm very self-aware.
No, my husband does that.
I'm very self-aware that I do that.
Okay.
What about restaurants?
I don't lie about it.
When we're on a date and there's a mirror behind, he will talk to himself.
I once clocked it.
For two hours, he talked to himself in the mirror.
I'm like, we're on a date.
That's an exaggeration.
Is that going to be in your book? It was only like an hour and a half.
Oh, okay.
My husband has a face he makes at himself in the mirror.
What's the face?
Like, like blue steel, like that.
Like he'll be, I'll be talking to him,
like a serious conversation and he'll be like,
it's out of the mirror.
It's out of control.
Like, what are you doing?
I know, I have to, I have to like-
Like my whole family was murdered,
he's like, how's my hair?
I'm like- Well, listen, I gotta He's like, how's my hair? I'm like.
Well, listen, I gotta, you gotta build inner confidence.
Well, okay.
So when people start taking a self inventory
and they start really being self aware of their capacity,
what have you seen change from this?
When you're aware of your capacity
and you can make adjustments in all of this,
then you can show up in your relationships
as more of a whole person.
I mean, the thing is, especially for women,
this whole concept of self-sacrificing for everyone
else completely backfires.
We do it in a way to care for the people we love most,
care for our kids, care for our partners all these things and then we
End up being the worst versions of ourselves when we do this. So we get grouchy. We lose our cool
We get resentful toward our partners. And so when you start
Assessing your energy and all these different areas not just that but these other areas and you start making some space
To care for them and to make some adjustments,
then you can actually show up in your relationships
in a way that actually benefits them.
And it feels good to you.
Because when we show up in our relationships
as our worst selves, we end up feeling really crappy
about who we are.
And so then that just becomes this layered effect
of feeling really crappy about ourselves
and our relationships,
and especially how we show up
in motherhood.
I agree.
I mean, I totally, totally agree
with everything you're saying.
I think when I noticed myself getting like a teapot,
you know that sound the teapot makes?
Oh yeah.
When I feel that, I have a place I go.
I literally will just be like, I'm going to the footspah. No one can find me there.
Like no one talks.
I'm not going to run into anyone.
And I just go there and I will work for two hours.
How much does guilt factor into all this?
Because like a lot of the themes and, you know, I speak to a lot
of women and work with a lot of women.
Like I hear the, like the topic or the theme of guilt
populating way more
with the women I'm around than with the men.
And I'm not like past, I'm just...
No, I think that's true.
100%.
Maybe what men don't have is,
don't feel as much or don't address it as much,
but like the theme of guilt pops up a lot of time,
at least with the women in my life.
Yeah.
So I think the reason why that we see it more with women
is that men and women are socialized
very differently.
And even though some of it seems kind of archaic,
it still is true to this day that we just kind
of like absorb these socializations.
So I feel like men are socialized to provide
and protect.
So if a man's like doing that, he's like, I
check the boxes, everything else is kind of
bonus.
But I'm not feeling guilty because I'm not
feeling guilty.
Like my husband, he travels every week for work. And I'm not feeling guilty because I'm doing what I'm supposed to do. Not feeling guilty. Like my husband,
he travels every week for work.
I remember once I was like, don't you feel guilty?
Like leaving the kids, like they barely get to see you.
And he's like, you know, for a minute, but this is my job.
This is what I do.
She asks me the same thing all the time.
This is what I do.
If I leave once a month for one night, I feel guilty.
Yeah.
I'll think about it all month.
We are socialized to be caretakers of relationships,
of our home, of these, to be the nurturers.
So we feel like we are somehow neglecting our role.
And so that's, I think,
what is a huge contributor to guilt for women,
but then men don't feel it in the same way.
Yeah, because I guess like when you ask that question
to your husband, if you were asking that to me,
initially when I go somewhere, I'm like,
I feel bad because you know they don't want me to leave
and it's like tough for them.
But then I rationalize, like, well, I need to do this
because this is like how we're providing
and how we're building a life for our family.
And so it's like that kind of outweighs in the long run,
the guilt of leaving for a day or two.
When Towns looks at you with his blue eyes with tears
and his eyes like that emoji and says,
I don't want you to go to work.
You don't feel guilty?
I grab my arm and say, listen, buddy, toughen up.
No, I'm just kidding.
Someone's gotta make the money.
Even when I go to work for a couple hours.
No, no, no, I mean, listen, like any parent,
it like rips your heart out, but at the same time,
like I'm able to rationalize real quickly.
Like it's not like I'm going off on a golf trip or skiing.
I don't have that.
Like I'm going to...
Wow, my husband does that and it's still like.
But your kids are older now, right?
Oh wait, I mean from, but I do, okay so let's like
break down the guilt.
So guilt is a feeling that you've sort of violated
some standard you hold yourself to.
Okay. Okay.
So there's two kinds.
There is like deserved guilt,
which is when you've done something wrong
and this is a good type of guilt
You deserve it. You did something wrong. It prompts you to change your behavior to like repair. Okay, right
Then there's undeserved guilt, which is almost all the mom guilt
Which is basically some set of standards or expectations you hold yourself to that have just like gone totally extreme
Like so if you think about the statement,
a good mom should, and then you just fill in the blank
with all the things, you probably have all of these
really extreme and impossible standards you'd fill in.
It's out of control.
Yeah, so a good mom should never leave her kids,
not even for a moment.
A good mom should never have to use a sitter.
A good mom should, we have these wild and impossible
standards that we hold ourselves to, and then when we have to do something that contradicts
all this guilt comes rushing in. But the reality is that's just not true. Like
that's not true. A good mom is like a blend of all sorts of things and you can
be a wonderful mom and still sometimes leave your kids. So we have to as women
whether you're mom or not, you have to challenge, like, what you're doing.
Women have to do that to challenge the standards.
I will also say something that may not be so popular
with this audience.
We had Ivanka Trump on recently,
and there was a clip going around where she was just
talking about how when her kids were younger,
she was, like, this time around with the administration,
she doesn't want to go and put her kids through it
because they're older now. But before she was okay.
And there are so many women commenting to her about,
like, how this is not a good way to parent.
And like, what I've noticed is a lot more women than men,
and this is just the observance that I've seen
on our channels, are quick to judge other women
about their parenting.
Like, I've never seen any of my guy friends
ever judge any other man or woman on parenting, but a lot of women are really tough judge other women about their parenting. I've never seen any of my guy friends ever judge any other man or woman on parenting,
but a lot of women are really tough on other women
if it's counter to maybe the way they parent
or think about parenting.
Well, it's projection.
It's not, it's-
It's a lot of time.
It's likely not so helpful and probably reinforces
a lot of the guilt because you have a giant population.
I actually don't give a shit what anyone says.
That's not my problem.
I don't give a shit what anyone says.
No, but I'm just saying, like, if you...
I just feel guilty because my kids are so cute
and I feel bad and they're little and I'm like,
oh, I have to go to work.
What I'm saying is, like, if you're talking about,
like, reinforcing that guilt,
if you have a giant part of the population
kind of doing that...
100%.
...then it's just gonna continue to be a problem.
So maybe it's, like, a frequency.
Yes. Yeah.
And I think, too, like, if you already feel the stuff
and then there is society kind of like the chatter
of all these women in society being like,
how dare you do these things? It's just gonna amplify.
It's just gonna amplify that guilt,
make it harder to move through it.
Michael, tell everyone the quote
that you have in your Instagram bio,
because it's good.
What? Oh, my...
Yeah. Oh, this is like not related to it. I think it's very relevant. Well, because it's good. What? Oh, my... Yeah.
Oh, this is like not related to...
I think it's very relevant.
Well, my dad used to say all the time,
like if somebody was saying something to you,
or like criticizing you, or whatever it may be,
he would say, listen, the coyote's howl in the caravan keeps moving.
Like, it's just like...
It's true.
That's why you have to look at social media.
Oh, gosh. Yeah.
A lot of life you have to look at like that.
Everyone keeps moving.
Yeah, you just gotta let it go.
How did you become interested in all of these topics?
Cause they're niche topics.
Yeah, because I lived with them.
So I've been in the field of relationships
for over 20 years.
Wow.
So I don't wanna get in the weeds on this,
but my dad's in this field,
and I grew up going to school with him
as he was working on his PhD.
Cool.
And we played this game where he would give me a case,
and he'd be like, how are you gonna help the family?
What do you think's going on with the son?
And I would analyze it.
So I kind of grew up just with a love for this type of work.
And then he started doing courses about relationships
before like everybody and their cousin had a course.
And I would travel with him and teach with him sometimes
and all these things.
So we worked together for a very long time.
But when I became a mom,
I was just completely blindsided
by how intense that transition was for me.
And just, it doesn't really end.
People say like there's a transition into motherhood, but then it just like keeps going.
And then you just have these other ones.
But I was so caught off guard by the amount of responsibilities that increased.
It's jarring.
It's jarring.
My anxiety, I am not an anxious person.
And I had so much worry.
The guilt, I struggled so hard with that for a long time.
I don't really have it much anymore.
So that's the one piece.
After that sort of major hit, I was like, okay, I know what I want to do.
I want to help women in their relationships and I'm going to start with motherhood
because this is gnarly and nobody's talking about really how to navigate this in a new way. The second piece to that is like it rocks your marriage at
least for me it did and just the amount of responsibilities that happened
overnight and I was so bad at involving my husband and he was traveling it's a
long story but we got relocated to California so we had like eight months of
our daughter's life where we were separate. And so he wasn't just like
there for that. And I just remember being like, I don't even know, like I love you,
but I don't even really like you right now. And like why am I doing everything?
And why do I know how to, I'm the keeper of all the information, like what is
going on. And so with these two experiences where I was like,
we gotta do some work here, we need support.
And so it just, yeah, speaks to me in that way.
I can honestly say,
if Michael didn't help me 50%,
I don't know that would want to be married.
I mean with kids like that,
it's really hard when you're doing it all your own.
I can totally see how women get resentful,
especially if they're working
and bringing in half the income.
Yes.
Because if the guy can't even change a diaper.
I mean, I've had friends where they're like,
my husband won't change a diaper.
He won't make a bottle.
I'm like, that would be a huge problem for me.
It's a huge problem.
Yeah, I think it would be,
I honestly think it would be divorce.
Well, I think a lot of people, both men and women,
and the reason some struggle when they become parents
is like, you nailed it on the head.
Like, your life alters and has changed permanently.
Mm-hmm.
And it's not gonna ever go back to the way it was before.
Like, I think some people struggle with making peace
with the fact that like your life is different,
your relationship's different,
your responsibility's different.
And it's like for the rest of your life,
hopefully you're like your kids.
Would he help when he was home?
Yeah, but it was almost like, and he is,
I talk about this in my second book,
but he was like passively willing.
So he's like, you know what I mean?
Where he's just kind of like, well, tell me what to do.
Show me how to do it.
Like he just wasn't like jumping in.
And part of it was my fault too.
Like I fully, we gotta take ownership in our relationships.
I fully take ownership that I kind of was like,
nevermind, I'll take care of it.
Or you don't do it the right way
or all the things that we can sometimes do. So I think it really just made the transition that much harder
I've heard a lot of women say oh you don't think they don't do it the way I
want it yeah when I was postpartum I didn't give a shit if you put the diaper
on the head but that's just you though just make sure it's organic and clean. Do you remember? I was like, figure it out. Go YouTube it.
Like, I've heard a lot of women say that.
Don't be clicking candy into that mic.
It's not candy. It's a throat coat drop.
That soothes my throat,
because I've been talking for weeks.
I don't want to hear any more bad reviews
about you clicking candy into that.
There'll be reviews.
Um, but I can see why there is room to be resentful.
And I also can see the man's side, like they don't know what to do.
Oh my gosh.
Sometimes, sometimes they do.
Um, it's tricky.
Well, I don't, I think like for many men, it doesn't come naturally.
Yeah.
And then you're like, oh, well.
You would have carried the baby for me.
No, I mean, you know what I think though, for me, I had a sister
that was a decade younger than me. Okay. You know what I mean? So like I grew up with a baby and I
remember spending a lot of time with her so like I think it was just normal, like
it was normal for me to be around babies. Yeah. You know? But for a lot of guys they've never, they've never.
Unusual. A lot of men, the first baby they ever hold is their baby. Is their baby.
That's wild. That was the first baby I held, pretty much was my baby. Pretty much me too.
Yeah, I mean so.
I'm like, what do you do with this?
But you, like, you've done certain things,
probably not even aware of what you're doing
that actually really helped you,
which is that you were like, you figure it out,
I'm not worried, I'm not gonna criticize you,
I'm not gonna micromanage you, not gonna judge it,
and also though, I'm gonna make you figure it out.
And I think that a lot of new moms, especially,
struggle to kind of let go of the reins a little bit
for whatever reason, hormones, just the change,
you just, whatever, all the worry.
And so they don't involve their partners in the beginning
and then their partners don't jump in enough
and then they end up being the one
who carries all that stuff.
Well, it's like kind of like, hey, stay out of it, hands off.
And then like, hey, you've been staying out of it, hands off, and I'm mad at you.
And it's like, it's mixed messaging.
Right. Totally.
I will say though, even if you do have a partner that steps up to the plate 50%,
it still does take a toll on your marriage to have a new baby.
Because you're sleep deprived.
Yeah.
If you're working, that's a whole situation. If you're working, that's a whole situation.
If you work together, that's a whole situation.
I think that it's a chapter.
I think you have to, honestly, I think you have to work twice as hard, if not more, in
a relationship after you have kids than before.
Yeah.
Yes.
Like it's, because a lot of times, because we talk about this all the time, you can start
to just be like, oh, we're just parents now.
As opposed to like watering the relationship.
Yeah, and like the relationship can start to become
really transactional instead of actually feeling romantic
or even like a relationship anymore.
So it takes a whole lot more work.
For me, like I gained 60 pounds with those, my baby.
Same.
They don't feel like getting on a strip pole
and putting on your kitten heels
and like bending over in lingerie.
It's like right away.
Yeah.
I need to like get my act together and like...
Like, could you go down the street to a happy ending?
No, I'm just kidding.
Go to the foot spa.
To the foot spa.
So don't install the strip pole in the bedroom right now?
I mean, wait a bit.
You gotta wait a bit.
It matches my aesthetic.
What have you found in the good things that work in a marriage art?
Like, what are the points that you see that are the common denominators of things that are really working?
Oh my goodness. That's a great question.
So I think there's a handful of things.
So one is you have to get really good
at talking about your relationship.
This is like a, it's a crazy big issue for couples
is that off, this is the typical dynamic
is that the woman will come to the man with like whatever,
something she wants to change or need that she has
and it immediately spirals into defensiveness
or you'll have like the hardship Olympics.
Oh, I'm tired too.
And like, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Every night, the hardship Olympics.
The hardship Olympics is where you're both competing for who has it worse.
No, no, Lauren, you, this is your sport.
I like, I'm tired and she'll be like, well, I'm pregnant and tired. I like will just I'm like I'm tired and she'll be like well
I'm pregnant and tired. I'm like, okay, but I'm still tired
You know, I will always be more tired than you
They do say women need more sleep than men because our brains are busier. Yeah
Not to take her side. It's like I knew I was I know I'm tired
But I also know I'll never be as tired as my wife. Yeah. Yeah Yeah, he told me his hair hurt when I was 10 months pregnant. It's not what I meant. What did you mean?
I meant like my like, you know, like when you're like
Key and then you're like hair feels like it's like yeah. Yeah
Your hair hurt I
I thought he was joking
that your hair hurt. I looked at him, I thought he was joking.
Anyways, go ahead, the hardship Olympics, what else?
Okay, so yeah, you gotta be able to talk
about your relationship,
and part of that requires this sort of mindset shift.
So here's the thing about life and relationships
is that we are always getting out of balance.
Life is always pulling us apart.
It's like the good stuff, having another baby, right? The joyful things, the work stuff, all of like the normal, the tragic,
the amazing things about life will just always be sort of pulling our relationship apart.
And so we have to get really good at recalibrating or balancing. But part of this means that
your relationship always needs something. And so if we can just embody that mindset
when our partner's like,
hey, I wanna talk to you about something I need
or whatever, we're like, well, that makes sense
because our relationships always are operating at a deficit
because life is freaking busy.
Life is wild.
It's always pulling us apart.
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So what are some examples of maybe things that you've needed or your husband's needed?
And Michael, you can chime in here too, that you've needed at a certain point and how has
it changed?
Like give us a chapter of that.
So for me, I feel like I've always kind of needed the same thing.
It just took me like 10 years to figure out
how to communicate it properly.
And what was then?
My husband.
I wanted, so what I figured out was that I wanted him
to express things to me that let me know
I was visible and valued in our relationship.
So I'd be like, oh, I would like some more appreciation.
And he'd be like, okay, words of gratitude, whatever.
Gratitude. Thank you.
Yeah.
And affirmation, that's what's important. And so he'd be like, oh, words of grata, whatever. Gratitude. Thank you. Yeah.
And affirmation, that's what's important.
And so he'd be like, oh, you know, you're a good wife.
And I was like, what? Whatever.
Like that's not a meaningful thing to say.
I know, they need to think harder.
Right.
Get him at the Thoris.
Yes.
I'm gonna get him at the Thoris for Christmas.
Yeah, well, I'll give you the ultimate
complement formula.
Okay.
Okay, so you can just apply this.
Okay.
Hold on, this is the most important podcast
I've ever done are your ears awake. Are you ready? I gotta use a Russian
Turn off the porn
Okay
So it's observation observe and I'll give you an example
Plus how it makes your life better
That is the best how it makes her life or my life your life better. That is the best way... How it makes her life or my life better?
Your life better.
So, I'll just make something up, okay?
So it might be like, I see how you prepped all of the snacks
for our kids today before we left for work.
I'm so grateful you do that because I didn't even have to worry about it
and I know how well you take care of our kids.
Thank you.
So I can say, I came home and I saw you organizing my bathroom drawers, and it makes my life
so much easier knowing where to find everything.
You do not have pubic hair in your bathroom drawers.
Yes.
Knowing where to find everything.
It's not pubic hair.
It's my face.
It's my face clipping.
It looks like pubic hair.
It's my beard clippings.
Oh, fuck.
God.
Could you get another bathroom and another house?
I'm trying to give a heartfelt compliment right now.
But no, you're doing it.
And that feels, I mean, I don't know.
Does that feel good to you?
That's not my favorite one. I think
they're not the bathroom organization. I think saying that I clean your bathroom drawers.
Okay fine. I think we can get a little more creative. I will say this one, I'd be like, okay,
we just went to our daughter's birthday party and I saw how much effort you put into the
invitations and into the party and it was so special and that enhanced her party and our life so much.
Right.
And you're grateful for how well she cares for your kids.
Grateful for how well you care for our kids.
Once a day, your life would improve 50%.
It makes a difference.
So it's literally once a day is a little tall order, Lauren, but
okay, it's not a, how it's literally... Once a day is a little tall order, Lauren. It's not a tall order.
It's not a tall...
Okay, can we time that?
How long did that take you?
I don't know.
That took a lot of...
Ten seconds.
I just did a whole board presentation.
That was easier than this.
Get off Twitter for one second.
I'm just kidding.
I can do it.
I can do it.
That's good feedback.
Let's do a challenge.
Let me add one more piece to it.
So it can be observation plus how it makes your life better or it can be a
quality, this one even, this is bonus, this is like bonus, a quality about Lauren that you appreciate or makes your life better.
You know, it's funny because- You probably are gonna get laid way more now. Like just that little change.
I won't be able to get off that dick if you give me a compliment every single day.
I love compliments.
From you.
I know.
Well, you know what's funny is because like I think I'm not so unique, but a lot of men
maybe don't require as many compliments and so it's somewhat foreign language.
That's so wrong.
I don't agree with that.
Well, I don't require that many compliments.
You don't even know the compliments I give you that are subtle because you don't even
know what the compliment, that's how good I am.
This is an argument that my husband and I had for 10 years.
You'd be like, I just don't need them. Yeah, I'm like you already get them.
That's...
That is such a lie that you don't need compliments. I don't need that many compliments.
For me.
Listen, I have a fully Japanese grandmother and a half Japanese mother with compliments in our house where we're rarefied.
That's why I make it subtle. I know that.
But it's, you know, you just learn to.
I'll give you an example.
He'll walk in in a suit and like kind of like brush it up
like a, what are those puffins?
And he won't say anything, but they're looking,
there's an undertone that they're looking
for a little something.
And then I'll like be like, wow,
that looks really good on you.
That color looks great.
Do you know what I mean?
Like you can tell when you guys need a compliment.
Okay.
I'm just telling you.
Or I'll be like, your hairline's so great.
You love that one.
I love a good hairline compliment.
Duh Lauren, I mean, hold on.
Okay, so-
So basically I don't know.
What on the other side, what can women do? You love that one. Oh, they love a good hairline compliment. Duh, Lauren, I mean, come on. Okay, so- So, basically, I don't know.
What can, on the other side, what can women do?
Should we be doing this compliment strategy as well?
That's a good question.
So, in my book, On the Mental Load,
I talk about what both men and women want
in their relationships.
And for men, I say it's three primary things.
So hopefully you don't say you disagree.
Well, let's hear them.
So the first is peace.
They don't like, they don't like a lot of arguing. That's part of the issue.
That's the number one, to be honest.
Yeah.
That's the first one I talk about.
That's smart.
Yes.
And it's part of the reason why a lot of times, like when you come to talk, like
if a woman comes to talk to her husband, kind of spirals, it's because they like,
don't mess with the piece, okay?
The second is affection, which then, you know,
also sex is part of that.
And then the third is respect.
Yeah, I think that's probably like,
probably all. Taylor, would you agree?
Yeah. Affection for Taylor's blow jobs, but.
Yeah, well that fits with that category.
Yeah, I think that that's, yeah.
No, but it's funny too, because like like I see like I have two younger sisters and I would always tell them like don't
Bring a bunch of unnecessary drama. I just don't
Like don't do it
Like I know like some people think it's funny bring the game do the drama
But it at some point the guys and be like, I don't have time for this. I like a sliver
Yeah, but it's like, you know
like if it's if it's constant all the time,
like if your relationship becomes a source of anxiety
or a place where you're showing up and you're like,
oh my God, here I go again with this person.
It's too chaotic.
Yeah, people just, they don't want it.
Especially men.
What are mistakes that you see people constantly making in marriage?
Besides not complimenting their wife every day
in that way that you specifically said.
I feel like this is like a whole episode on this question alone.
So okay, I'll start with one.
One is that a lot of times in our relationships we don't give until we get.
So if we are wanting something different from our partner, then we're like, we're going
to hold out in another area until they start to come my way.
So we sort of get in these standoffs
a lot of times in relationships.
And so that will pretty quickly
erode your connection and closeness.
I think too, we kind of villainize our partners a lot.
I think we start to like,
especially after you've been married a while,
if you sort of get in these bad attitudes
and they sort of really take root in your relationship, we can start to kind of make our partner
the enemy. And so then we start to see everything they do through this
lens. So maybe it's like, my partner is so selfish. So this lens
clicks in, we see everything they do through this selfish lens, we make
assumptions about what they say or what they do through this lens and so we don't do a good job in our
relationships of actually checking our perception of our partner and cleaning
that out, resetting it pretty regularly, focusing on the ways that they make our
life better, focusing on the ways that they are showing up or even giving them
the benefit of the doubt. We need to give way more gracious interpretations
of our partner's behavior.
I think sometimes when you're in a relationship
for a long time, every little thing just starts to stand out.
And it is hard, but I totally agree with you.
The way if you can almost start with a blank slate
in the morning and like reset
Yeah, and think really positive things and see them from a different perspective. It's helpful
Okay, so you want to get in the weeds on this one because this is like I think one of the most powerful things in
Relationships so you think about anybody you are in a relationship with so you can do each other
But you do this with your kids too
with so you can do each other but you do this with your kids too. So we start to sketch a like sort of like an internal picture of the person we're in a
relationship with like a mental picture of them and it's like a caricature. So
you know like caricatures of presidents it's always like you know Trump's hair
or Obama's ears or whatever they make them super big. So as we sketch the
caricature we start to enhance certain qualities and really focus in on those and then we minimize all the others. And a lot of times when you're
starting to get bugged by everything you're enhancing some of those really
negative qualities and so then it's like all that you see. So that becomes like
these glasses almost you wear that you interpret everything through. So like we
have to see the positive.
We have to shift our focus onto the areas
we're kind of neglecting to pay attention to
that are really good.
And we have to reset it regularly.
That makes total sense.
I hope my character looks like Jessica Rabbit in your head.
No, but it's, it's, I think this is like for anything
that, you know, I think as humans,
everybody falls in the
trap where you just look at life through your own perspective, your own perceptions, and
people start to fail to look at life through the perceptions of those around them.
I think it's actually a much more powerful way to think to try to put yourself in somebody
else's shoes and see the situation as they see it.
Yeah.
Because like, it's arguable that if you're just looking at something the way you see it,
you're likely missing most of the picture.
Oh my gosh. Yes.
Because everything is kind of subjective.
So I think if couples, I caught like the one minute moment,
if every day you spent one minute, like you set your phone,
you just did this for one minute, you just closed your eyes
and you imagined what is going on with your partner that day
and you just practice getting in their perspective.
What are they worrying about?
What's going on in their world?
What are they stressing about?
What's on their plate for the day?
It will dramatically change your relationship,
because we don't do that.
We're just in our world.
Then we come together, then we have the Hardship Olympics,
and then we get annoyed with each other,
and then the disconnection grows.
It's funny, even this is a random side example, but if I'm doing a business deal
with someone, I'll maybe think like 10% of the time on like what I want to happen and the outcome
I'm looking for. And then I'll spend like 90% of the thought thinking about like what they would
want to happen. And then from there, you're able to kind of structure something that's much easier
to push through, if that makes sense. Yes.
Because you're like, you're starting with their perspective
and like what will work for them.
And obviously you want to, you want to have a win
for yourself as well.
But if you're just constantly thinking like,
this is what I need to win.
You're not thinking about them at all.
It's likely you're not going to be able to figure something out.
Well, it probably gives you an edge
because not everybody thinks that way.
So when you're already kind of like,
well, what's going to serve them
or what are they thinking about?
Or what do I need to like overcome
in terms of their objections? It's probably already in a winning spot
when you do that. You had a viral moment on your Instagram talking about when you
ask your partners for help but it doesn't get done. Do you mean like a
honey-do list? What is that? What does that mean? Can you talk to us about that?
So do you know the concept of the mental load?
No, tell us about it. You don't? No. Okay. Okay, this is like, can I get in the weeds?
Yes. Okay. This is the podcast. Alright, let's do it. So I'll give you the 30,000 foot
definition and I'll get in the weeds on this because it's kind of important to
understand. So the mental load is the seemingly never-ending running to-do list that we carry around in our
minds and it has two major components. One, the majority of it is invisible and
two, it takes up cognitive real estate. So it like crowds out other, just like
room for other things, remembering things, regulating your emotions, getting in the
mood for sex, all this stuff crowds it out. Everybody has a mental load in the home and family life. Usually women carry it. So, okay.
I feel like I carry a little bit of mental load.
Well, you guys have talked about doing things 50-50.
Michael's very maternal.
That's great. That works for you.
Yeah.
I can't tell if that's a compliment or not.
It is a compliment.
I think it is.
Yeah.
Yeah, like today, our son had to go to the pediatrician.
I took him to the pediatrician.
Yeah.
Your maternal, I appreciate that.
It's, I think it's great.
Go ahead.
Real mother goose over here.
And I don't think like 50-50 doesn't work for every couple.
No, no.
But it does have to feel fair.
Because if you don't feel like it's fair,
that's when you'll build that sort of animosity.
Yeah, we also have a different situation.
We do a show together.
Well, I want to be help.
I mean, especially now, like, she's carrying another child.
And like, I don't, you know, I want her to be comfortable,
as comfortable as can be.
Yeah.
So go ahead, I also don't think, like, I know this is,
like, I don't see it that big of a deal to go, like, change diapers and things have the mental health. I also don't think, like, I know this is, like,
I don't see it that big of a deal to go,
like, change diapers and things.
It's not.
I also don't want my kid running around with a dirty diaper.
No, then you get a rash,
and then you got a whole other set of issues.
Yeah, you got, you treat towns like your little Ken doll,
with you do his hair.
Yeah.
Like, here's your baby doll.
Go ahead.
Okay.
Well, this, you might not know much about this if you feel like this is
really well handled in your relationship but this is a massive issue for a ton of couples. Okay, so
if we get in the weeds on the mental load, a lot of times what happens is like the guys will say,
yeah so that's life. Life's busy. Make a list, knock it out, and kind of move on.
And the women will feel kind of silly for like, why am I so overwhelmed when this is
just like basic life stuff?
Doing the laundry, like picking up the kids, all the stuff.
So this is the in the weeds.
There are three domains of tasks with the mental load.
There's the physical, that's like cooking dinner, doing the laundry, mowing the lawn, stuff like that. There's the mental, which like cooking dinner doing the laundry, you know mowing the lawn stuff like that
There's the mental which is like the making of lists
So if you're like work your work life a lot of that's mental and then the third so if you imagine them like circles
So we're doing like a Venn diagram
the third is the emotional and this is the
Like this is the kicker because the emotional is like the regular ongoing
calculations typically women not always maybe you're really good at this are
doing thinking about the experiences of members of their family so they're
trying to like maximize positive experiences so like for example you know
oh if we pull our kid out of this school for a better school academically are we
gonna like scar them for life
because they are gonna miss their friends?
Or if we don't, are we gonna scar them for life
because they now like don't have as good of an education?
It's like all of these sort of mental calculations.
What about even micro moments?
Like even like breakfast, like-
Oh my gosh.
I don't want phones at the table.
I wanna talk about what we're grateful for.
Yes, thinking about that even.
I want tiny little moments like that everywhere.
You know what I was thinking as you were talking,
like I don't think this is not an issue in our marriage,
but I think one thing that we do,
primarily because we get to talk to so many people
like yourself is we talk about a lot of this stuff.
So it's on my radar.
You know what I mean?
Like I imagine if we didn't talk to people like yourself
and I didn't talk to her about this stuff as often, it would probably not. I've never heard someone explain it though like this. But you know what I mean? Like, I imagine if we didn't talk to people like yourself and I didn't talk to her about this stuff as often,
it would probably not.
I've never heard someone explain it though like this.
But you know what I mean?
Like it would, as a guy,
like it would probably like go over my head,
but because we talk about it so often, I'm aware of it.
So maybe like that's why we're able to manage it together.
Yeah.
And I'll just, just to like round it out,
where these three circles come together,
where they overlap, that's, I call it the triple threat.
And the majority of tasks in the home and family life,
it goes back to what you're saying with these micro moments,
include all three domains.
So like when a woman's like,
I don't know why I'm so overwhelmed,
and it kind of can be like judging herself
for feeling overwhelmed.
It's like, well, yeah.
Cause like every little thing you do
in your home and family life can be unpacked
to include tasks from all of these three areas.
So when you do that for everything that goes on
in a home and family, it's like no wonder
women are burned out and overwhelmed,
or no wonder just like family life can be so stressful.
I also think, and I'm gonna be really honest,
I have a lot of help.
Totally, yeah. And I cannot imagine, and I said this be really honest, I have a lot of help. Totally, yeah.
And I cannot imagine,
and I said this to my nanny the other day,
I cannot imagine not having help.
She raised three children with no help.
We talk about it all the time.
She used to bring her daughter to her job,
and her daughter used to help her at nine years old.
And she tells me all these stories
about being a single mother and having no help from a man and
Being pregnant and having to bring her a small daughter and her daughter having to help her
And I'm sure that set her daughter up who's now successful for a success in a lot of ways
Yeah
but I have extreme empathy for people that don't have help because
I'm lucky enough to be able to delegate and say hey hey, can you, you know, help me with this?
Can you help me with this?
To not have that...
And I have help from him 50%.
So to not have that is...
It's... I can't imagine for a woman.
Well, the way that I think about it,
we would not be able to do what we do for a living without it.
Right. I don't feel like I have to justify it, we would not be able to do what we do for a living without it. Right.
I don't feel like I have to justify it.
I'm not justifying it.
I just feel like I have to say, like, fuck,
if you don't have any help and you don't have any,
maybe you don't have a husband either helping you.
Yeah, I'm not even justifying it.
I'm just saying, like, if we didn't,
there would be sacrifices that would need to be made
in other areas, and so I can imagine how hard that is. Yes.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
Because like we would literally have to say, okay, like, you know, we both work at the same time.
It's almost like impossible to have a job.
Yes.
Because it's like, I don't know, it's this full
360 immersive job at home.
Yes.
And then to run a house and like you're saying keep it clean, do the laundry, mow the grass, that it's a lot. Yeah I mean like the demands of
modern family life are I mean then you then you like roll in all the peripheral
stuff like the expectations that we have for ourselves because we're constantly
consuming content that makes us feel like we're falling short and all this
stuff so it's it feels almost insurmountable because this is not like how we used to live life, you know, in this way with these crazy expectations for ourselves and our family and our home and our kids behavior and what we look like and all the things.
We didn't use to exist this way. We are, women are working at higher rates than ever before, which is great, but also more demands on family and you
need support to be able to kind of like do all the things and I think it's just
become nearly impossible and that's partly why women are struggling and why
couples are struggling is that modern family life is just absolutely
relentless. It's a lot and then it's like blue day at school and you dress them in red.
I don't have a spirit week at my fifth temple.
Yeah, it's like strawberry snack day, make snowmen.
And then you got to bring that and then you got to pack a lunch.
It's on and on and on.
Whereas, no offense, the man's a little more.
Oh no, I showed up at school that day and the teacher hit me with the,
what's going on for snack day.
And I was like a deer in hell.
I had no idea what I was like.
We picked Valentine's day for snack day because my daughter and I are obsessed
with holidays and she asked you that and you didn't even like.
Well, I mean, listen, that's most men don't know about the school snack day.
I was, she might as well have been speaking Mandarin to me.
I had no idea what she was talking about.
You could have been like, we're going to do a strawberry
strudel heart shaped cookie.
We're going to be doing heart shapes with, with
whipped cream around the strawberries.
You could have got creative with it.
I didn't even know.
Yeah.
Well.
You didn't even know about snack day.
No, I didn't even know about snack day.
So this is like, okay.
This is what she's saying.
So coming back, like we totally veered from the
original question and I'm probably still not going to hit it yet, but part of the complaint of women is
that men say things like, well, I don't know.
And so it excuses them from having to participate or take care of any of these things.
I'm not saying that you're doing that, but it was just a perfect example.
And part of it is, is that I think where men need to shift,
women need to shift too, around this area
of the relationship, where men need to shift,
is they have to get better at being in the know
of what's going on in the home and family life.
But let me give you the reverse.
What if I showed up and I'm like, it's snack day.
Like, is that what women want either?
Like, I don't know about that.
I don't know.
Yeah, you bring up a good point.
If he came home and he goes,
time for some bills to pay,
I'd be like, get the fuck away from me.
I'm in my house.
Cause I like to be in my feminine.
Like what if I popped out and I was like,
I made the strawberry strudels.
Like, you know, like that.
Even with bills, I don't want to be involved.
I think sometimes women gotta be careful
with what they- I'll take the snack that
you can take the bills.
Sometimes you gotta be careful with what you're asking for.
Yes.
Because there is a little bit of a testosterone issue going on with some in my...
It's all the seed oils.
Yeah. We can't blame it all on the seed oils, but...
Soy milk.
I think some things you should just be like, okay, like, this is maybe gonna sound sexist,
but maybe there is some areas that men should not be involved in and some...
I actually agree with you on this, which is a little bit maybe controversial. to sound sexist, but maybe there is some areas that men should not be involved in and some...
I actually agree with you on this, which is a little bit maybe controversial in my field.
No, it's not anymore.
But like, I...
If my son, like say he's going to go, like, I don't know, he wants to go play football.
Like, dude, I don't know.
Like, and I'm sure like mom could show up to support, but like, I don't know, maybe
like that's an area where I could like spend a little more time with them.
Not that I'm the greatest.
You know what I mean?
Like, just think like there are some areas like you want to take them hunting
No, yeah, right. Well, I think okay
So with a topic of the mental load what I see like if you start consuming anytime any content online about this topic
It always villainizes the men. It's like oh they you know, just divorce them. It's basically like the solution that everybody
Yeah, it's like really really honestly as like in this field, it's incredibly frustrating
and it's not productive.
Criticism is not a great starting point for change.
So like, why are we doing that?
It makes no sense to me.
And I think, so my book approaches it completely differently, which says it's you two versus
the world.
Life is busy.
Life is hard, get a line
together and then you attack it together. And the other piece is like if we make
men the villains, what are we the victims? Like I'm not down with that. Like
women have a ton of power to make changes in their relationships on their
own. I am not down for this like victim stance where we have like no sense of
agency in our relationship. So we have to be so careful.
I think along with what you're saying,
sometimes especially online,
we'll see all this content about like wanting men to level up in some pretty big ways and I'm not
opposed to it. There are some men out there that are
pieces of work that need to do some work,
but we do have to be careful. If we expect men to be like
replicas of women emotionally, we are not gonna find it attractive.
We're not gonna be down with that.
No, I think that's what people are seeing.
I don't need you to be doing Snack Day.
That's good you know, because I'm not.
But let me caveat that with when I do snack day and it looks like Disney on
ice.
Yeah, I'll be complimentary.
And the cookies have the smoke coming off of them and they're perfect.
And the teacher is beaming from ear to ear and your daughter has her apron on and we
bring it to school.
I need you to be like, you know what?
I saw you making those cookies. Those cookies looked amazing.
I'm gonna show up to the school and I'm gonna be-
You are such a good mom and a good wife.
I'm gonna show up to school and be like,
listen, I got snack day taken care of.
I don't need you to help me with the house,
the curation, the energy, like the way it looks,
the decor, the cookies, but you better compliment me.
Yes, I appreciate it.
Is it fair to say that modern couples are also kind of up against societal norms that
have always been mixed with pressures to maybe change those norms and people have not gotten
used to that yet?
What do you mean?
I don't get what you mean.
There is still, and I know this is a crazy thing to talk about these days, but there
is still a male-female dynamic, at least in a heterosexual relationship. And I think sometimes when you push men to be more feminine
or women to be more masculine, it's-
It messes with the dynamic.
It messes with the chemistry a bit.
Yeah, I think that we have some of that going on.
I feel like we're in like a,
we're just like in a transition time,
I think for a lot of couples' relationships,
just like in general as a society. women are like, we're more highly educated for the most part, except
I think doctorates we're not, but 50% of women are in the workforce. We are less reliant
on men for the providing and protecting like we used to be. So we're wanting more things
out of the relationship. So we've kind of like upped the game and we're like,
come on guys, like get with the program.
And I think we've changed at a faster pace than men have
because they're like, wait, I've been doing it this way.
Now you want something different from me.
And I think we'll find our way
and we'll get there a little bit.
And I think it'd be great for men to level up in some ways,
but I do, I just agree with you.
Like, I think we have to be careful of upsetting that male,
the feminine masculine dynamic.
But there is like some accountability on men too.
There's a lot of young guys that I think are,
and this the data's out there,
that are starting to struggle behind women of the same age
where they're staying at home longer.
They're not generating an income
as early as some of these women.
There's this whole shift going on where you mentioned,
like a lot more women are entering the workforce
and in garnishing better salaries or greater salaries.
And like that's also probably going to be a big struggle
for a lot of those young guys as they enter those
relationships because maybe they're now not the breadwinner.
But like, again, that's like all sorts of people
have to take personal accountability and figure that kind of thing out for themselves.
Yeah, what they can handle.
Yeah.
I think it's a nice balance. What I've realized, like for me personally, is I
like the balance in a person of masculine and feminine energy. I think
when you're hyper feminine or hyper masculine, it's hard to be in a relationship with.
So, you know, I'm really masculine in my career and maybe the way I show up on
social media is a little bit more masculine. When I'm home, I'm in my
feminine like no other. And I think with you, I want you to be in charge of
protecting and, you know, making sure the family unit's good. with you, I want you to be in charge of protecting
and making sure the family unit's good.
Wait, I thought you were doing that.
No, no, no, you're doing that.
I don't want anywhere near that.
And then, and I expect that.
But he also is in his feminine, like I said, he's maternal.
I think if you can kind of learn to balance both as a human,
it's helpful to come together.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
And part of it is just negotiating all of that together
and navigating together and also getting clear
on the expectations for the relationship.
I don't know if you guys ever had to talk about
when you're in your masculine and your feminine,
but couples have to be aware of these things,
talk about these things and negotiate them
because otherwise you might be expecting him
to do the providing and the protecting,
but he's like, oh, I didn't know I was supposed to do that.
Right. Right.
And then it's just like,
you are constantly disappointed then.
So communicating.
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Doing this show for as long as we've done it, like call it at this point, 800 hours
of sitting together talking to people.
In a weird way, it's been like couples therapy.
I believe that.
Because you sit here, like sometimes I hear her say things on the show that I
haven't heard her say to me, and we like kind of are like working through issues
together at the same time.
No, but do you know what I mean?
Like, I think I honestly, like most of our friends that are couples that are
struggling, I think it starts with a lack of communication.
They're not on the same page.
They don't have the same expectation,
there's resentment building.
Is that what you find is a big one?
I think it's definitely one of them.
So I think a big one is that we sort of carry around
inside of us all of these expectations
that we have developed throughout the course of our life.
So like we have, you know, we learn how to be a partner
when we're growing up watching our family dynamics.
Even if you only had one parent
or you were raised by grandparents, it doesn't matter.
You're still sort of like creating almost like templates
that live inside of you that then come out
when you reach certain points in your life,
almost like dormant seeds where certain circumstances
provide the right sunshine and the right water.
So a big one is when you get married and then the other is when you have kids.
So like all the templates about what a good parent should look like and what your partner should look like as a parent come
to the forefront. What happens though is a lot of times people aren't even aware of
these things operating under the surface and all that they are is they're creating these ideals
that they're projecting under their partner.
And if they're not aware, and their partner's not aware,
it becomes a major source of frustration and disappointment.
Because when you have all of these unexamined expectations,
they really are just sources of like judgment,
of other judgment or self judgment.
Throughout your marriage, you've been married,
you've known your husband since you were, you said 14?
14, yeah.
14 years old and you've been married for a very long time.
How has it, 87 years, I told you like,
frozen Titanic, 87 years.
But how do you look at the marriage now
compared to when you started?
How has it evolved?
Yeah, we had to work through the stuff
that I try to help couples work through.
We had to work through all that stuff.
That's so interesting to me,
that even someone who has the tools.
Well, there's two people in the relationship
and I'm not saying it's him,
but I'm just saying it's a dynamic. It's a dynamic. So you're like, he'll two people in the relationship. And I'm not saying it's him, but I'm just saying like, it's a dynamic.
It's a dynamic.
So you're like, you know, he'll like spark something in me
and then I'll, you know, we'll end up in this place.
But one of the biggest was being able to talk about stuff
without it spiraling into defensiveness.
That was like one of our biggest hurdles
that we had to like keep working at over and over again.
Because when he'd get defensive, I'd shut down
and then I would just like,
hold on to everything.
So, like, what are some of the prompts
you would bring to the conversation
in order to have someone not get defensive?
Because I think every couple does that.
We've done that.
We've done that. We do that every day.
We call it the tit for tat.
Oh, yeah. The tit for tat.
Yeah.
Every day. I'm not like...
We fight.
Yeah.
Well, that's not... That's fine.
I mean, we fight. So, Anyone who's- Well, that's not, that's fine.
I mean, we fight.
Couples can fight.
So what do you do when you get defensive?
So, okay, there's lots of strategies.
I have like a ton of strategies in my book.
So if you want to,
if you're gonna like bring something up
that's like you've been holding on to,
you need to talk about it.
One thing you can do is you can hedge it.
Some people don't like this, but some people love it.
It's helpful.
Which you just say,
I need to talk with you about something.
I'm kind of worried you're gonna get defensive.
Can you handle it?
Okay.
It does, okay.
It's like, I don't know.
It's a little bit tricky, but it's really helpful.
So it does a couple of things.
One, the person can self-reflect.
Cause a lot of times we don't self-reflect.
And so they can say, yeah, I can handle it.
So then if they say something and they get defensive because they just committed to not
getting defensive, they sort of pause and they have to reevaluate.
Am I going to actually do this?
And then if they do get defensive, you can say, I was worried you were going to get defensive
and you just did.
Like what?
So then the follow-up is what are you hearing me say right now that is causing you to feel
defensive?
Because a lot of times, again,
we are interpreting what they're saying
in a completely different way than they meant it.
And we're using all of these, like I said,
we wear these glasses,
we interpret our partners through different lenses.
That's playing a part.
Okay, what are the other strategies?
I want all of them.
That's a good one though.
That's a great one. I can't wait to wait for you. She's gonna try it on me. So this
probably is like more, my thought process about some of the strategies
is like you move along a continuum of confrontation. So I believe that in some
relationships you do get have to get confrontational to get a little movement.
So this is more of the confrontational strategies. So if you
bring something up to your partner and they immediately react with
defensiveness, one thing you can do is you can bring out like what are their
sort of ideals for your relationships. You've got like their relationship goals.
Because here's the thing, a lot of us have these ideals for our relationship,
but then we act in a way that doesn't promote
actually these things occurring.
Like give us an example.
Like, okay, you want more sex in the relationship,
but you throw everything on me,
you're not safe for me to talk to,
and you get defensive every time we talk,
or you want more closeness and connection
in our relationship, but you're always on your phone.
We behave in ways that are different than what we say we want as our outcomes.
So does that make sense?
Totally.
So in the moment you can say something along the lines of what is it that you want our
relationship to look like or in a perfect world what is our ideal relationship look
like? And if you're like, oh, well this, this, and this, and you're like, what are you willing
to do to get us closer to that point?
So you're almost like challenging them to take responsibility for the way that they're
showing up in that moment.
And so if they say, well, whatever, they can answer, then you can call them out if necessary.
And that's when you would say something like,
you say you want more connection,
you say you want more sex, like you complain about that.
So, but yet you won't even hear me out.
Like I don't feel even safe talking to you.
How are we supposed to get here
if we can't do any of this?
It makes total sense.
Yeah.
Is there any tips else you got up your sleeve about that?
What else you got?
Anything else?
I'm taking notes on the defensive.
I'm not saying I'm not defensive.
It's like when you tell me to get off the phone and then I look and you're on
your phone, you're like, yeah, but I'm working.
And I'm like, well, you're on your phone.
I am working.
I know, but what do you think I'm doing?
Pruising X.
Come on, Michael.
Are you fucking serious?
What are you, what do I think you're doing? What are you doing? No, don't worry about it. Yeah, you're bruising X. Come on, Michael. Are you fucking serious?
What are you, what do I think you're doing?
What are you doing?
Don't worry about it.
Yeah, you're perusing X.
He loves X.
No, but regardless, it's like that.
It's like, that's a good example.
It's like if somebody, like somebody's saying to one person to do something, but then they're,
they're literally doing the same thing and not realizing it.
So then what would happen?
Would you be like, well, you're doing the same thing.
Yeah, that's what happens.
That's not a good, that's not a good answer.
I don't do the same thing. Yeah, that's what happens. That's not a good answer.
I don't do the same thing.
Oh my god.
I'm working.
I don't do the same thing.
Michael and I have very different,
and this is probably,
and we've talked about this on the show,
one of our main issues.
We have very different thoughts and boundaries
and purposefulness around our phones.
Okay.
Very different.
Like, the way...
Well, okay, so like...
The way he is with his phone would never work for me.
Listen, I hear all these people, and many of them have been on the show, and many of
them are my friends, and they go and they say, if you look at your phone, it's gonna,
you're gonna be on someone else and you're gonna be disrupted and it's gonna set you
off and the energies. And I'm'm like I just never experienced that.
I never pick up my phone. I'm like oh my god now I'm on somebody else's schedule.
I understand. I don't feel obligated to answer texts or phone calls or emails.
The news doesn't bother me. So when people tell me these things I'm
like that's not my experience. Okay but let me ask you this. When he's on his
phone like that moment you guys are sitting at home, I'm assuming, and you like look over and you're like,
you get annoyed.
I find it dismissive.
I find it, I work on my phone.
It's what I do for a living.
I, when I go to dinner with someone,
they would expect me to be on my phone.
No, it's in my purse.
It's dismissive.
When I'm with someone...
I don't go on my phone to dinner.
...in, uh, anyone. It's in my purse. Yeah. It's dismissive. When I'm with someone in anyone, I think that if you can't take a minute from your phone,
like what is life?
And I'm not saying he's like that obsessed with his phone.
That's not what I'm saying.
He's not.
I just think in certain moments, the dinner table, in bed, I'm not an in bed phone person.
But I would invite you to consider that you working on your phone is irrelevant to me.
What do you mean?
Meaning like I don't care if you're working on it or scrolling on it.
Whatever you're doing, it doesn't really matter just because you're working on your phone
does not give you a greater permission to do something.
Like, you know what I'm saying?
Yes, yes.
I think some people say, like, well, I'm working,
so what I'm doing is justified.
I get on my phone at 10 from 7.30.
What?
I'm not on my phone till 10.
So a couple things.
So I was gonna, like, analyze it.
So, like, a couple things.
So one thing could be you're sort of creating the storyline So a couple things. So I was gonna like analyze it. Yeah, go ahead. So like a couple things.
So one thing could be you're sort of creating the storyline around what he is like when
he's on his phone.
Oh, he's like this dismissive guy.
He's distracted.
He's da da da da da.
Yeah.
Okay.
So then it's going-
Big storyline.
You should hear it in my head.
Yeah.
So that's your-
It's like a whole story.
Okay.
Is that your storyline?
Big time. Okay. So what he's doing then is like you're like gathering evidence to support your story.
Every second. I have a bag full of evidence. I've stuff I've written down. I love it.
It's very toxic Lauren.
The internet gets so mad at me. I'm honest.
It's not healthy.
Okay.
No, but that's honest.
But it's like collecting complaints. So you're just gonna kind of fire yourself up.
Yeah. Okay, so like the hard push to you would be,
well, like you're responsible for how you write your storyline.
Yep.
Toward him.
Uh-huh.
So like you, one choice is to like rewrite it.
Okay.
And be like he's just like, this is downtime.
This is downtime and I want him to feel comfortable in our...
Oh, that's hard.
I know it's hard.
I know.
I'm just giving you one option.
There's other options, but like I want him to feel.
Dr. Morgan, that's hard.
I can try.
I'm not gonna, I'm not gonna try.
Try it.
Like I want him, like one thing that I think about
with my husband is like, I want him to feel comfortable
in our home.
I don't want him walking around on eggshells
and I don't want to exist that way either.
So I try like when he goes on his phone,
not to like nitpick, cause like,
I don't want the same thing turned toward me,
and I want him to like be at peace in our home.
So that's like one way.
Okay.
The other might be is like,
you just have different expectations
around what's an acceptable use of the phone.
And if this is like a big deal to you,
that might be something that you guys have to negotiate.
I think that a good deal is no phone in the bed,
no phone at the dinner table, no phone in the car.
Do you not think those are easy?
Take the phone to the bathroom.
I can do dinner table and bed, a car, I'm gonna need that.
I wheel and deal the whole time.
I'm just running around on that thing.
I'm not, I don't think it needs to be used in the car.
Those are, I just feel like-
You got two out of three.
Be happy with the win.
Be happy with the win.
So like with expectations when you're negotiating,
because that's what couples, like I talk about in the book,
like you gotta negotiate some of these things
that are like big ones.
You've gotta decide, do you wanna let it go?
Do you wanna level up to meet the expectation?
Are you going to lighten up a little bit on the expectation?
So maybe you like find...
Oh, hard.
I know it's really hard.
No, but I mean, like, we're just using like random examples, but I think
to your greater point, I think couples create these narratives and then they're
constantly looking for these negative things and that just becomes the reality.
It's like, it's like a box of Pringles.
Like when my dad said, you'd be like,
I stacked my Pringles.
You're turning a molehill into a mountain.
That's like what happens.
It's like people.
A lot of waves.
Yeah, but I mean, it's like some of these issues
that are not such big issues start
to become the biggest issue because someone only
is focusing on the negative.
And once you're doing that, then you
can't see any of the good stuff.
True.
Exactly. Exactly.
I'm going to look at you through a new lens tonight. Say, wow any of the good stuff. True. Exactly. Exactly.
I'm going to look at you through a new lens tonight.
Say, wow, this guy's worldly.
He knows everything that's going on because of his ex postings.
He learned it all on ex.
How can we work with our partners to cultivate a supportive and positive environment at home?
I mean, I think part of it is the good communication is like the cliche answer.
I think another is like these gracious interpretations of things.
So like giving the benefit of the doubt as much as possible just kind of changes the
tone of the relationship when you're doing that a lot versus being like kind of snarky
or irritated is obviously going to feel different to be in the relationship. I think, hmm, just
like so many things. Supportive. I think be generous with appreciation as much as possible.
I think people get stingy. It feels uncomfortable. Like maybe you felt uncomfortable giving the
compliments. It feels uncomfortable sometimes, but you cannot like give your partner a big head. You cannot like make them cocky with
too much appreciation. So like appreciate as much as possible. Do you disagree? No, no, no, I agree.
I think, I think, I think that for both, like the benefit of the doubt should be given if the,
if they're putting the effort out there to try. Like there's nothing worse than like when you're trying
and then you get shut down because it wasn't good enough
because then it makes you like,
well, I don't wanna try that again.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I think, you know, sometimes couples get super
entrenched though, into these patterns.
So it's like, it might not work out perfectly
the first time around.
So it takes time.
I think relationship changes are often a slow grow.
Why do a lot of people feel lonely within a relationship?
Because...
That's a big theme here.
It's a big, yeah, it's a big theme and
that was a viral one because I think just so many people resonate with that idea and I think it's a number of things.
I think it's that women sometimes feel like they carry a lot of this, like the thought and the worry
about the home and family life.
So they're doing that on their own.
A lot of what they do is invisible
and doesn't get acknowledged or appreciated.
I think, I think too, like we're on our devices so much
that we kind of like disappear into this like different world.
And so we can be right next to our partner
but they're like completely distracted.
And so I think that's a big piece of it.
I think another reason is like, once you've been married for a bit and you start entering
into the transactional stage of a relationship, you become kind of like roommates.
I think that's a really lonely place to be.
Your partner's not pursuing knowing you anymore, which is like a big one.
We have to get good at that.
Maybe they're not even pursuing like time with you.
So you start to feel like, I don't even know if they like me.
So it becomes this like deterioration of the closeness in the relationship.
And that can feel really lonely.
How do you work with couples to help them get their intimacy back?
Because obviously like we talk about sex on this podcast a lot.
Um, sex in my opinion is very important to a long-term relationship.
I think for anyone.
So, what do you do when people start to kind of lose that?
I think, um, there's a lot of places you can start,
but I think one piece is that sex starts outside the bedroom.
But a lot of times we don't see it that way.
100%.
Yeah. So it's like, if your relationship is struggling,
so will your sex life.
And if your sex life is struggling, probably so will your relationship.
And so kind of like expanding how we think about sex is really, really important to kind of like taking that step into working on the relationship.
No one's ever said that in the podcast.
And you're so right.
If your wife is bitching at you for how horrible you are all day long and playing the victim,
who wants to have sex with that?
And on the other side, if your husband's being a fucking asshole and sitting in his overalls farting in his jeans,
watching his phone all day.
What kind of guy you pictured here?
Who's farting in their overalls?
I don't know.
Have you married Farmer John?
No, Michael doesn't have overalls.
I got rid of those when we started dating.
You had overalls?
Yeah, he did have overalls.
Taylor, he had overalls.
I was horrified.
I wasn't sitting around farting in my overalls.
What year was that? Were you 12?
We were... How old were you in those overalls?
I was probably 20.
20 and I made you wait another year to date me.
It was like Oshkosh too.
It was Jean. Jean overall.
No, I went to some... What did I do?
I don't know. Honestly, the year before that you were a kilt.
Yeah. That was for a party. That was for a party.
How did you get her?
I don't know.
This is why it took ten years.
I had to refine a couple times.
You had a new wardrobe.
Taylor, this is all true.
This is what it's been marked.
Yeah. Taylor, this is all true.
This one's marks.
Okay.
I'm gonna say it as well.
For real though, like what you're saying is a big, big deal.
A dynamic of specifically around the mental load stuff
that comes out a lot is that the woman will start asking
her husband, well usually husband or like her partner
to step up more and he will whatever, he won't do it
or he'll be like okay just
remind me just make me a list so then she starts becoming the nag in the
relationship and so he usually starts kind of pulling away at that point and
so he starts to feel to her like a child and because now she's the nagging mother
she starts to feel like the mother and so now you have this parent-child
dynamic going on,
which is like-
Which is not sexy.
Not sexy.
Not sexy at all.
So that's like another piece.
That makes so much sense.
It's like a childhood situation.
What's the flip of that with the dad and the daughter?
Oh.
Flip of that with the dad and the daughter.
I don't know, actually.
It mostly happens in that direction. Yeah. But yeah
that's like okay now I'll be like thinking about that my whole drive. My ex-boyfriend used to
nag me all the time. It was really it was flipped. He would nag me all the time. I
wasn't perfect. Let's just put that out there. I was I was a chaotic, very
chaotic. But he used to nag me all the time and it just got to a point where I was like
I don't want to fuck you. No, I mean, it's just I'm not attracted even if it's not mother son
Just make it parent-child cuz that applies there too. It's just little like yeah
Like boy like not like that's exactly I didn't even know that's what that was
I all of a sudden one day woke up, and'm like, I don't wanna be intimate with you.
Yeah, it's like the ick.
You don't wanna do that.
He also broke both his arms.
So you didn't have to.
Who were we talking to the other day
when you brought this up?
He literally broke both his arms.
How did he break both his arms?
I don't even remember.
It was a long time.
Don't put him on blast like this.
No, I couldn't put him on blast.
I feel bad.
Oh my gosh.
Hopefully he's not a listener.
Okay.
That would be even weirder.
Tell us about your book.
This was such a fun episode.
How fun.
Come back anytime.
You're so fun.
Thank you.
Okay, so my new book's called
A Better Share How Couples Can Tackle the Mental Load
for More Fun, Less Resentment, and Great Sex.
And it's the only book I'm aware of at this time that talks about the mental load
and how it impacts your sexual relationship.
So that's something that's really different.
It also, and like I've read everything pretty much out there on this topic and
consume a ton of content on it.
It, it positions the couple as being on the same team.
It talks about, so you're not going to feel like defensive as a man reading this. You're not going to feel like you're villainized.
I just don't think that's helpful.
And so it's really going to equip couples in some powerful ways and it talks about four areas you have to get good at sharing.
So perspective,
expectations, ownership, and accountability. And then it gives couples a plan for how to navigate
the mental load in modern life.
I think that's exactly why we wanted you on the show
because it is such a fresh, unique perspective.
I think with books too, we're gonna start to see
these like niche things that people aren't talking
about a lot, like Atomic Habits was like such a big book.
It's because it was something different. Do you know what I mean? And that's how your book feels.
It feels like a fresh perspective on it.
I think it's genius.
And what you said is so true about,
as a couple, it should be like you and the couple
against the world.
Not, yeah, I don't want to fight with my husband in my home.
What's the point of that? I'd rather be divorced.
Yeah, we always say it's good if you feel like
you're both pushing the boulder up the same hill.
Yes, yes.
As opposed to separate.
But it requires all the things that you said.
You have to talk about it all the time.
Get realigned.
Yes, yeah.
That was a really fun episode.
I'm crying.
You cry, you're tearing on your cheek.
Oh, it's just like, so, I mean, that was...
It is a funny, I mean, I feel bad for the guy, but...
I feel bad for you wearing overalls.
I might bring those back out. Maybe I'll wear them on an episode.
I hope you do. Alone.
Can you make it the cover of our episode?
I'll put, I'm gonna change the color out of these.
You should find the photo so everyone can like...
You know it's the worst too, because I wore them with no shirt.
And how much did you weigh?
Oh, and I was like, I was like, I was working out a lot.
I was in college.
No, no, no. How much did you weigh?
No, I was like, I mean, I sit like probably at a good like 170, 175 now.
I was like probably like 195.
I was just like a big like meathead.
And you walked up to me and I was like, huh?
You never saw, I never walked up to you in the overalls.
I have that picture in my head.
You saw a picture of it.
Oh my gosh.
In my vision, my narrative.
It was bad too, it was like, you know, like back in the day
whenever all the guys had like the little spiky hair.
Yes, oh yeah.
It's not a proud moment, I'm not gonna lie.
You know when you look at the time,
you think it's like the coolest thing,
then you look back.
Yes, of course.
Yikes.
I'll bring it back.
That'd be some good content.
I don't think that's coming back.
That'd be some good content.
I do not think that's coming back.
Not one girl in this room wants that to come back.
Let's do a poll. Do a poll.
No.
If anyone wants...
Because then we gotta imagine you going to the bathroom.
You're like taking all this click, click.
That's horrible.
Imagery.
That's horrible.
Imagery.
That's pretty fucked up.
It's like a woman's jumpsuit. Please don't do that.
I gotta end the show before I compromise myself anymore.
Dr. Morgan, where can everyone follow you?
You can follow me on Instagram, Dr. Morgan Cutlip, all one word.
Find me on my website or my books are anywhere books are sold. I know you're gonna write more books and you can come back anytime you were lovely shocked.
This is great. And you just helped our marriage. Hey, no joke though. If you did break both your arms overalls would be
ideal.
Thank you for coming on the show. Thank you.